Difference between revisions of "AntakiandBarnes2005"

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{{BibEntry
 
{{BibEntry
|Key=Antaki&Barnes2005
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|BibType=ARTICLE
|Key=Antaki&Barnes2005
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|Author(s)=Charles Antaki; Rebecca Barnes;
 
|Title=Self-disclosure as a situated interactional practice
 
|Title=Self-disclosure as a situated interactional practice
|Author(s)=Charles Antaki; Rebecca Barnes;
 
 
|Tag(s)=Discursive Psychology
 
|Tag(s)=Discursive Psychology
|BibType=ARTICLE
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|Key=AntakiandBarnes2005
 
|Year=2005
 
|Year=2005
 
|Journal=British Journal of Social Psychology
 
|Journal=British Journal of Social Psychology

Revision as of 07:25, 21 July 2014

AntakiandBarnes2005
BibType ARTICLE
Key AntakiandBarnes2005
Author(s) Charles Antaki, Rebecca Barnes
Title Self-disclosure as a situated interactional practice
Editor(s)
Tag(s) Discursive Psychology
Publisher
Year 2005
Language
City
Month
Journal British Journal of Social Psychology
Volume 44
Number 2
Pages 181–199
URL Link
DOI 10.1348/014466604X15733
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Self-disclosure has long been a site of research in clinical and social psychology, where it suffers the fate of many interactional phenomena. It is operationalized (typically, into a set of bald statements of varying intimacy), and measured as a dependent variable (subject to the operation of factors like the age or gender of the discloser, the degree of acquaintance with the disclosed-to recipient, the expectation of reciprocity and so on), or manipulated as a causative independent variable (which affects such things as the perception of the discloser, the effectiveness of therapy, and so on). This treatment of self-disclosure, embedded in a research culture of a-contextual, experimenter-defined phenomena, risks missing the point that in ordinary life, self-disclosure is a social performance which must be brought off in interaction, and has its interactional context and its interactional consequences. When we examine examples of such brought-off disclosures, we start to see patterns in their design as voluntary revelations of personal data, and patterns in their social function, which are invisible to the standard factors and measures paradigm of experimental social psychology.

Notes